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Golf the winner after classic Major finish
It's been 42 years since the PGA
Championship abandoned match play. For one thrilling Sunday afternoon on
the greens of Valhalla Golf Club, Tiger Woods and Bob May brought it back
in glorious fashion.
Two clutch birdie putts on the 18th hole of regulation that will find
their place in golfing lore weren't even enough to settle one of the
greatest two-man displays in championship history.
This one was simply too good to finish. And there was still one
memorable putt left.
The sight of Woods pumping his fist and screaming in excitement after
following May's brilliant 15-footer with a 6-footer of his own to stay
alive on the final regulation hole was good enough.
It got even better on the first playoff hole when Woods was prancing
toward the cup on No. 16, pointing in glee toward the bottom of the hole
as his ball rolled in from 25 feet to give him the lead he would never
relinquish.
The putter that was so unsteady most of the week was masterful when
needed most, with Woods one-putting all three overtime holes to win by a
shot.
''I just had to stay patient,'' Woods said. ''Once I found the rhythm
and got into the flow of the round, I knew I had a chance of winning this
championship.''
Woods needed only 12 putts over the final nine holes of regulation,
then three more on the three playoff holes to win his third straight major
championship and his second straight PGA.
It was a complete turnaround from the opening holes, when Woods missed
relatively short putts on four of the first six holes to lose his lead and
fall two shots behind his playing partner.
''I putted terrible starting out,'' Woods said. ''It was just a matter
of time before the putter came around and finally it did.''
When it did, the match was on.
Woods made a short birdie putt on No. 7 and followed it with his best
putt of the day to that point - a 15-footer on the par-3 8th hole that
tied him with May at 13 under.
From then on, Woods hardly missed. And when he badly needed to make a
putt, he did every time.
''He never made another bad stroke from the eighth hole on in,'' said
Butch Harmon, Woods' instructor.
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A classic Major finish reaches it's conclusion. Woods wins again. Allsport
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That was never more apparent than on 15, when Woods made the putt that
may have kept his chances alive.
May was only 4 feet from the hole for birdie while Woods was facing a
15-footer for par after missing the green with his approach shot. If Woods
missed and May made his short putt, the lead would be three shots with
three holes to go.
''I knew if I made it, his putt would get a bit longer,'' Woods said.
Woods did just that, rolling in the right-to-left breaking putt. And
May pulled his putt, missing on the left.
''That was big,'' Woods said.
''Critical,'' May agreed.
There were still more critical putts left. The first came on the 17th
hole of regulation, when Woods put a sand wedge 4 feet away and made the
putt to tie.
That only set up the dramatics on 18, when both seemed destined to
3-putt for par and both ended up making birdies to break the PGA
Championship scoring record at 18 under.
May putted first, from about 80 feet up a ridge on the par-5. He judged
the speed badly, and the ball rolled just off the green into the first cut
of fringe about 15 feet above the hole.
Woods had the advantage, but also had a difficult putt he would have to
hit up a big hill, then have it break left and stop quickly. He managed to
get that 6 feet from the hole.
May's putt went in, but he readied himself for a playoff anyway. He
knew the putt would go in.
''I never counted him out all day,'' May said.
And what a day it was.
''It was one memorable battle today,'' Woods said. ''We never backed
off one another. Birdie for birdie, shot for shot. We just never backed
off.''
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